NO ONE is allowed to use this tennis racket

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CULT TENNIS

CULT TENNIS

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 561
@CULTTENNIS
@CULTTENNIS 10 ай бұрын
Check out “The New Rules Of Singles” by downloading the Fuzzy Yellow Balls app today! iOS: apple.co/3Hmjgmg Android: bit.ly/3S872CY
@caseysmith544
@caseysmith544 10 ай бұрын
I have seen some ;ess power pro players now have normal strung racquets but have loser strings like a little kids racquet using thin synthetic deigns closer to what a little kids racquet might use only more durable materials or some kind of full gut, and this is probably one of the only ways to have a racquet set up so a player can use a similar bend in strings helping create more topspin.
@sam-gulch
@sam-gulch 10 ай бұрын
I really like the idea of pre-sponsor sports having these crazy innovations and upsets by random people.
@elilevit4574
@elilevit4574 8 ай бұрын
large amounts of money shot sports to never before seen heights while simultaneously destroying the culture behind them. I wonder if it was worth it :(
@dannyfar7989
@dannyfar7989 6 ай бұрын
I am doing a "pre sponsor sport" woth occasional single event sponsoring and TV coverage, some ask themself the same question but most of the "professionals" (some can live from selling and developing tech) are sure rhey don't want the sport to change. Right now we can do world records and Championships where basically everybody knows each other abd buy stuff where we actually pay the people who develop and build it instead of marketing teams.
@nicholasrv8834
@nicholasrv8834 10 ай бұрын
My brother wa sa tennis pro in the eighties. reached number 35. (not as a result of the spaghetti racket). but he did play with it for about 3 months, and beat Vilas on clay somewhere in Europe. He still has is on a wall in his house. He was sponsored by Slazenger. I have often asked him to take it down and lets get on a court, he says it would probably crumble within the 1st 5 minutes as it has been on a wall for about 40 years. Thanks for the vid, it brought back memories
@esbymaziwy7681
@esbymaziwy7681 10 ай бұрын
Recently I played with someone locally. He played over 10 years ago. He put on his shoes from when he was 20, there were bits of shoes all over the court.
@pedroff_1
@pedroff_1 9 ай бұрын
Racket strings really don't last very long. Of course, over 40 years, the rest of the racket might not either
@prophetmargin7497
@prophetmargin7497 8 ай бұрын
That's pretty amazing, Vilas was essentially the new Borg on clay in the early 80's, can you say who your brother is?
@tzimiscelord8483
@tzimiscelord8483 8 ай бұрын
Your father is right, there is a lot of energy bound into a racket, any stress and it'll probably come apart pretty quick
@nicholasrv8834
@nicholasrv8834 8 ай бұрын
@@tzimiscelord8483 actually these rackets were strung very loose which is why it had all the "extras" added to prevent strings from rubbing together and wearing out quickly.
@jeg1353
@jeg1353 10 ай бұрын
Ilie Nastase didn't break a promise. He promised not to play AGAINST someone that is using the spaghetti racket. He didn't say HE wouldn't use it.
@jjanderson8235
@jjanderson8235 10 ай бұрын
... become a 'Pasta Masta' 😂
@jeanxza5395
@jeanxza5395 9 ай бұрын
Average romanian mental gymnastic
@seneca983
@seneca983 8 ай бұрын
It would've been pretty funny if he had played with a spaghetti racked *and* then thrown a fit and resigned when faced with an opponent doing the same.
@u.2b215
@u.2b215 8 ай бұрын
@@jeanxza5395 It is true though. It's a odd thing to use it himself but he didn't break any promises.
@memberwhen22
@memberwhen22 6 ай бұрын
so he didn't break a promise he's just a shitty hypocrite. got it.
@WorthlessGeek
@WorthlessGeek 10 ай бұрын
As a table tennis player, when you mentioned that Fischer went down the route of racket improvement rather than skill, I thought that was very much a table tennis mindset. Then learning that Fischer a indeed a table tennis player made so much sense
@el_equidistante
@el_equidistante 10 ай бұрын
Table tennis requires as much skill as tennis
@lancergt1000
@lancergt1000 10 ай бұрын
but why is the table tennis mindset blames so much on equipment instead of skill
@QwertyUser1983
@QwertyUser1983 10 ай бұрын
Agree!!! The gap between racquet characteristic between each table tennis blade and rubbers can be enormous.for example, in table tennis, we can make one side very spinny but other side very slippery. Good luck making tennis racquet tennis like that. 😍😍😍
@auckwads8169
@auckwads8169 10 ай бұрын
Becuae tt has so much variety, he created the long pips of tennis and the wimps couldnt handke it so banned it
@miguelbarahona6636
@miguelbarahona6636 10 ай бұрын
@@QwertyUser1983 In tennis, we have rackets with heads ranging from less than 80 to 135 square inches. We have rackets from 230 to 400 grams. We have stiff or flexible rackets. Control, power, beginner, intermediate, advanced rackets. We have over 700 different strings (with specifications from brands), from various materials (nylon, poliester, kevlar, natural gut, etc...). We have different string gauges (from 0.60mm to 1,80mm). To over complicate, we can make hybrids with those strings (one type in the mains and another on the crosses). We have different string tensions, ranging from less than 30 to over 65 lbs, according to each player. We have at least 5 grip sizes. I will not details about grips, overgrips, vibration dampeners, lead or tungsten weights, string savers, different types of shoes (according to each surface: cement, grass, clay, carpet, synthetic), socks, etc.... Tennis market is way bigger than table tennis market. Believe me.
@sergiosarmiento4371
@sergiosarmiento4371 10 ай бұрын
Fishbach: "I could play with a shoe..." After beating Stan Smith
@MA-rq6ie
@MA-rq6ie 10 ай бұрын
Stan Smith: Chalenge accepted
@downwardtumble4451
@downwardtumble4451 9 ай бұрын
American Dad???
@andrewleonard7540
@andrewleonard7540 10 ай бұрын
Maybe 3 weeks ago I strung a racquet without weaving the mains. It produced a wild amount of topspin, but the strings broke in 20 minutes.
@JimmyButler101
@JimmyButler101 10 ай бұрын
Get 50 racquets and show up to a tournament
@steinanderson
@steinanderson 10 ай бұрын
only stringing mains you could get away with 10 racquets and string between matches.@@JimmyButler101
@JC4.72
@JC4.72 10 ай бұрын
@@JimmyButler101lmao That would be amazing 😂
@TheTrevorist
@TheTrevorist 10 ай бұрын
I've done this with kevlar string on the mains and a smooth poly on the crosses. First time I had just fucked up the weaving on accident but I like the spin it generated. I usually do it just above the sweet spot so I can still hit a nice flat shot.
@CULTTENNIS
@CULTTENNIS 10 ай бұрын
Without those string savers mentioned, the Spaghetti would have only lasted mere minutes before a string snap!
@tim40gabby25
@tim40gabby25 8 ай бұрын
I knew an ambidextrous lawyer, Rob, who came on a squash court with a raquet in each hand.. they had to add a codecil ".. and the maximum number of raquets to be carried is one." 1974ish.
@andrechaos9871
@andrechaos9871 8 ай бұрын
Too bad. Can you imagine people learning how to play with more racquets? So many possibilities were closed! Professional sports are no fun.
@yaseen4375
@yaseen4375 7 ай бұрын
Did he get charged with….racketeering?
@nunyabiznes7446
@nunyabiznes7446 7 ай бұрын
[Rob walks onto the court and Duel of the Fates begins playing]
@SlimeBlueMS
@SlimeBlueMS 7 ай бұрын
I want to see someone using 3... somehow
@falsemcnuggethope
@falsemcnuggethope 6 ай бұрын
Sounds unfair to change the rules just because someone is better than you.
@mattyisack1
@mattyisack1 10 ай бұрын
just when I think you've covered every possible quirky/interesting story in professional tennis, you find something else
@odonovan
@odonovan 7 ай бұрын
I'm 67 years old and my tennis playing days are behind me. However, I was also a table tennis player and wanted as much spin on the tennis ball as possible. In the '80s, I used to play tennis frequently. I got the largest racket possible and had it strung as loosely as possible (within reason). That caused the impact to form a "pocket" in the strings, which caused the ball to stay on the strings longer, which made it possible to put unreal amounts of spin on the ball. Not only that, but when I played someone who hit the ball extremely hard, my looser strings would return the ball at a slower speed. Being used to overpowering opponents and making them hit their returns long, they had a LOT of difficulty suddenly having to run up to get to returns, when they were used to never having to leave the baseline. I frequently had opponents actually run into the ball, when my returns hit the forecourt and suddenly took off back toward them like a rifle shot. My main problem was I was NOT consistent with serves, no matter how much I practiced. I ended up taking some speed off my serves and adding spin, which helped quite a bit and which also gave my opponents fits when the ball would leave the service court at a 45 degree angle.
@Livingmeerkat68
@Livingmeerkat68 6 ай бұрын
That's such a cool story, thank you for sharing!
@grandpied
@grandpied 5 ай бұрын
...at a 45 degree angle. haha! That was the punch line your talents have extended well into your writing.
@SomeRandomGuyPlaying
@SomeRandomGuyPlaying 4 ай бұрын
I love crazy spin too! there was one windy day where I hit a super spinny slice serve, it curved into the next court into their no man's land zone. My first return in an official highschool match was pulling a dropshot return from opponents serve, just sailed a bit over their net and back over to my court, stunned my team mate and the opponents! At the time I was a stand in for an absent player because I was still too new at tennis to make the team, but because the coach saw the shot he ran to me and yelled for me to do that again and im now a permanent part of the team! Since then been crazy about heavy spin whenever I felt someone wouldnt expect it
@Bobison
@Bobison 4 ай бұрын
More and more pro players are stringing their racquets at lower tensions these days. Many play with tensions in the 40s. One, Adrian Mannarino, unbelievably plays well with a tension in the 20s! I guess it's what you get used to. Every racquet and string tension combo yields plusses and minuses.
@WivoRN
@WivoRN 10 ай бұрын
WELCOME BACK OUR GOAT 🐐 Very interesting video, and incredible editing as usual!
@CULTTENNIS
@CULTTENNIS 10 ай бұрын
The love is mutual Wivo ❤
@VictorPenteado
@VictorPenteado 10 ай бұрын
Funny to think Wimbledon had a restrict dress code but didnt had a single line about how the "instrument" should be.
@btf_flotsam478
@btf_flotsam478 8 ай бұрын
It is shocking how many old-fashioned games have very little in the rules about these things. It took until 1979 for cricket to explicitly say that their bats had to be made of wood (after some controversy about someone using one made of aluminium).
@thetennistalk
@thetennistalk 10 ай бұрын
Love it mate another great video!
@CrispyBacon1
@CrispyBacon1 10 ай бұрын
Oh my, Cam, you’re everywhere!
@CULTTENNIS
@CULTTENNIS 10 ай бұрын
^ The real GOAT of tennis KZbin
@LiamApilado
@LiamApilado 10 ай бұрын
The graphics are unbelievable in your videos. Top quality
@publiusvalerius8934
@publiusvalerius8934 8 ай бұрын
Does anyone remember the 80s and 90s when all of those wooden rackets hit the thrift stores, garage sales, and estate sales? _They couldn't give them away._ Seeing McEnroe with one is shocking and nostalgic all at the same time.
@BoutWout
@BoutWout 10 ай бұрын
Thought I knew it all on rackets... But this is new to me and a great summary video!
@jadaweeknie
@jadaweeknie 10 ай бұрын
no footage or showcase of this racket at all? :(
@Graceclaw
@Graceclaw 10 ай бұрын
Makes you wonder if such footage even exists tbh
@shreya1100
@shreya1100 10 ай бұрын
@@Graceclaw it may but maybe not in public domain, or no one bothered to digitise them
@ryanthelion656
@ryanthelion656 10 ай бұрын
might be on the dark web...@@shreya1100
@jayceh
@jayceh 10 ай бұрын
It wouldn't be that special anyway, less spin than the Nadal forehand we've been watching for over a decade.
@derrickstorm6976
@derrickstorm6976 8 ай бұрын
0:39 love an intro that contradicts itself within a single sentence
@HarveyJackson1967
@HarveyJackson1967 6 ай бұрын
Ownage ownage ownage
@bb1111116
@bb1111116 10 ай бұрын
I remember the spaghetti racket when Nastase used one against Vilas. It created a double hit by design and so was rightfully banned. However, as John McEnroe complained a few years later, there were no strict rules about what a tennis racket could be. He pointed out by contrast how Major League baseball bats were strictly controlled. As a result of the lack of tennis racket restrictions, Prince started the larger racket revolution. Add graphite frames and better synthetic strings and tennis was completely transformed from 1980 to 1990+. Ironically McEnroe was at first best able to take advantage of a larger graphite racket. But soon Lendl, Agassi and Sampras overpowered him.
@caseysmith544
@caseysmith544 10 ай бұрын
I remember in 1990's or early 2000's when a maximum head size had to be instituted for play at most levels as you saw 120 square inches or 305 square cm as a big jump in late 1990's due to Willams twins and heard the pro levels racquets at 135 square inches or 343 square cm in play by no later then 2001 and Jr capped later at X for each age group.
@bb1111116
@bb1111116 10 ай бұрын
​@@caseysmith544 yes, super sized rackets became a problem. Since I’m an older guy I remember the classic wooden rackets of the 1970s (Bjorn Borg) which had a head size of 65 inches. Racket size exploded quickly (by Prince) to over 100 square inches. I believe the limit today involves length and width which as you wrote comes out to be a maximum of about 135 inches.
@caseysmith544
@caseysmith544 10 ай бұрын
​@@bb1111116 Yes and I remember when 110 square inches was broken by Kent or Kennex and everyone in tennis was in an uproar making issue go on mainstream sports news until older traditional brands like Wilson or Spalding were soon at same sized heads. I have seen perfectly round heads on tennis racquets mainly on kids smaller Jr racquets where size is 135 square inches of head size in very late 2000's. Same round 135 square inch racquet design ended up being used for new game Speedmitton that never lasted as a new sport. Now if brands making speedmiton were not using round 135 square inch head, they used long design Kennex and Head pioneered for 117--120 square inch head. A main reason Speedmitton died off was lack of a head shape and how the birdie should be, some wanted foam in a bigger tennis sized shuttlecock while others used a tennis ball in a shuttlecock deign. Some odd versions of Speedmiton made for beach used same big wooden paddle as in Paddleball/beach tennis.
@johnmcdermott5922
@johnmcdermott5922 10 ай бұрын
THE GOAT CULT TENNIS
@tim40gabby25
@tim40gabby25 8 ай бұрын
1:40 That's a very young Andy Murray!
@dirtywashedupsparkle
@dirtywashedupsparkle 10 ай бұрын
I've heard of the spaghetti string racquet but had no idea what it was all about. Such a pity Werner Fischer got screwed by the tides of controversy, but sometimes it's innovative dead ends like these that really force the conversation to move forward. Definitely wouldn't mind seeing this racquet in action today, just to see the spin!
@realitynowassigned
@realitynowassigned 2 ай бұрын
What's innovative. It breaks the game
@realjoans
@realjoans 8 ай бұрын
Please make a video about Matteo Berrettini. From Wimbledon finalist and top 3 contender to barely staying in the Top 100 now. What happened to him? He is an absolute fan favourite, id love to see a video about him.
@Editor_Hound
@Editor_Hound 8 ай бұрын
I was lucky to hit wirh one Fischer racquet spaghetti strung and I have to tell you, it really is a cheat code. The amount of topspin and sidespin that thing can produce, coupled with clay, produced some unpredictable and sometimes hilarious bounces.
@robinkalousek7247
@robinkalousek7247 10 ай бұрын
We need more of your videos mate :)
@joneinarmattiasvisser6113
@joneinarmattiasvisser6113 9 ай бұрын
If one could produce strings that are very grippy like table tennis rubber then it would not only be legal, but also consistent spin
@nickdenardi
@nickdenardi 10 ай бұрын
increased spin is one thing, but unpredictability should be regulated fiercely. Having an opponent that can hit shots with unpredictable bounces equivalent to hitting divets in clay... it makes it something too random to still be considered sport. The fact that people retired from matches (lol) proves it must have been INFURIATING. Not just better spin, but no consistency at all with the bounce. also, unless every player is ivo karlovic, pros today arent hitting casual rally balls that bounce higher than the fence. They might produce more mphs with their rpms than the spaghetti racket allowed, but the ratio between power input and spin was surely absurd on that old thing. It's better that it was banned. It's something to use for fun between friends.
@schobaxt.8781
@schobaxt.8781 10 ай бұрын
Too much spin, huh? "chuckles in table tennis"
@Peter-ff1tp
@Peter-ff1tp 9 ай бұрын
“Chuckles at the thought of only having to manage a five foot wide table”
@alexkfridges
@alexkfridges 8 ай бұрын
Lol ok have fun covering a court larger than a table
@sstaarrmmaann
@sstaarrmmaann 10 ай бұрын
Wake up babe, new CULT TENNIS video just dropped
@nickpheonixify
@nickpheonixify 9 ай бұрын
I hate how often someone comes up with an innovative and intelligent way to play a game only for the people in power to reject it and change the rules themselves to ban it.
@Peter-ff1tp
@Peter-ff1tp 9 ай бұрын
This is neither innovative or intelligent. It’s a cheat. Before they dictated what a “conforming racquet” was it was already a cheat and everyone knew it. Removing the aspect of skill from competition is not a good thing. Ever.
@cadekachelmeier7251
@cadekachelmeier7251 9 ай бұрын
If something comes along that dominates a sport, the decision should be based on what's best for the sport. If it makes the game boring because it's impossible to return a volley, nobody will want to play or watch it. TCGs do that kind of thing all the time. They ban cards that dominate tournaments and make the game stale.
@nickpheonixify
@nickpheonixify 8 ай бұрын
@@cadekachelmeier7251 TCGs are actually a perfect example of why this is trash. Someone could spend hours, days, or weeks researching hundreds of thousands of card combinations to find something unique that works and wins. Then invest thousands of dollars to get the required cards. Only for some judge at the event to make a single ban ruling to not only remove the person's deck from the competition but invalidate everything they have done and all the money they have spent. how is that in any way fair to the player? You know what would be a much better option than that. Full open selection so we just don't see mirror decks with slight changes and if a card is truly uncontested create counter cards to be released in the next batch.
@CoconutMigrating
@CoconutMigrating 8 ай бұрын
If the racket was actually this good they didn’t have much choice. It’d be like allowing aluminum bats in MLB. It fundamentally breaks the sport in a way that would destroy the sport long term.
@nickpheonixify
@nickpheonixify 8 ай бұрын
@@CoconutMigrating or people would learn to adapt. a lot of things we do in modern sports would have been considered impossible in the past and are only now seen as normal due to the increase in technology and technique. if I went back in time with any of the modern equipment should it be banned because it would be hard to play against? people would find a way to play with or around these bats they just didn't want to "change the meta"
@renko9067
@renko9067 3 ай бұрын
Would have been nice to see actual examples of the spaghetti in use in a game 🤷🏼‍♂️
@imalwaysright
@imalwaysright 10 ай бұрын
The production quality of your videos is next level
@mirandahotspring4019
@mirandahotspring4019 8 ай бұрын
Two cats watching a game of tennis. One says to the other, "I've got a brother in that racket."
@PrinceAlhorian
@PrinceAlhorian 9 ай бұрын
The classic case of "If our favorites can't beat it, ban it..."
@tbicedshot2819
@tbicedshot2819 8 ай бұрын
What are you talking about? It's just simply unfair, making it impossible to tell where the ball would go when hit. Where is the favoritism in that? It's like how Nike's shoes were banned from the Olympics and full body swimsuits as well, just because they were unfair and gave an advantage not by thr player but by their equipment.
@dodiswatchbobobo
@dodiswatchbobobo 8 ай бұрын
Also happened when a high-school girl softballer struck out Babe Ruth when they were trying to decide if desegregating baseball meant degendering it too.
@TopLasagnaLover
@TopLasagnaLover 7 ай бұрын
@@tbicedshot2819 If everyone can use its not a unfair advantage
@totally_not_a_bot
@totally_not_a_bot 7 ай бұрын
​@@tbicedshot2819Aight. All footraces shall henceforth be run barefoot or with flat-soled leather sandals. Strip all technology to render all participants equal.
@GamesPlayer1337
@GamesPlayer1337 6 ай бұрын
@@tbicedshot2819 If everyone has access to the same equipment its not an advantage anymore. Its not unfair at all. The skillset to play the game would just move or change to something else with a focus on something else than it is now. Who are you to say this is good or bad? Especially without even seeing the real consequences of new innovative equipment (at the time atleast) being played out to a point where way more people used it and learned to play with and against that equipment. I'd love to see games advance not only with players but also with equipment and new and exciting technology! Thats also more fun to watch, imho. ;)
@electric_boogaloo496
@electric_boogaloo496 10 ай бұрын
The way you put it "rather than attempt to improve his lousy game, he instead became fixated on the prospect of improving his lousy equipment", I loled so hard. So many times in life I have seen several people including myself falling into that mindset. Thankfully, I have tried and mostly succeeded in walking the path of "its the Indian not the arrow".
@robertgarcia2266
@robertgarcia2266 10 ай бұрын
well in his case he just upgraded his arrow and it worked
@FED0RA
@FED0RA 10 ай бұрын
​@@robertgarcia2266added some dynamite to the arrow lol
@Susan-mm3sb
@Susan-mm3sb 10 ай бұрын
Fantastic information!!! Really enjoyed your research and presentation!!
@Nkreas5
@Nkreas5 5 ай бұрын
why fishbach looking like Wolverine😭
@marceloalmeida_
@marceloalmeida_ 8 ай бұрын
As a Video Editor myself, this is one of the best edited videos i've seen lately. Congratulations.
@alabasterwilliams5329
@alabasterwilliams5329 8 ай бұрын
That technicality is the purest form of “watch me” I’ve ever heard of. Two hits because of two distinct points of contact against two sets of strings.
@Monaleenian
@Monaleenian Ай бұрын
It's not correct though. In any normally strung racquet, the tennis ball comes in contact with only one string initially, when it strikes the first atom of the first string. As the ball continues sinking into the stringbed of the racquet, it comes into contact with more of the strings before rebounding away. Nobody considers this to be a double contact and the logic is the same as the faulty logic used to classify the spaghetti-string racquets as illegal because of a double contact.
@Parc_Ferme
@Parc_Ferme 6 ай бұрын
12:43 Ash exactly predicted how tennis is played today. And without the spaghetti racket.
@AuroraTheFirstLight
@AuroraTheFirstLight 10 ай бұрын
I feel it's very sad that it ended this way A part of table tennis is designing a racket that fit your play style and even in tennis we see a bit of this with the selection of weight and materials
@verlatenwolf
@verlatenwolf 10 ай бұрын
You must be a bot using ai generated comments.
@HotClown
@HotClown 9 ай бұрын
​@@verlatenwolf and what are you basing your comment on? genuinely curious, machine learning is doing immense damage to our society, as you're demonstrating, and I am very interested in exactly what triggered this paranoia for you (hint: bots don't tend to bother with saved playlists or actual unique usernames)
@wintermutevsneuromancer8299
@wintermutevsneuromancer8299 9 ай бұрын
true
@Peter-ff1tp
@Peter-ff1tp 9 ай бұрын
Fitting your play style and making it so that there is NO way for your opponent to prepare for what’s coming are not the same thing. Tennis wouldn’t have survived if this had continued.
@ravanpee1325
@ravanpee1325 9 ай бұрын
Table tennis rubers need to be ITTF approved
@alexhulea2735
@alexhulea2735 8 ай бұрын
As a romanian, i have only one thing to say: i hope nastase kept the spaghetti string raquet. Makes for a good story about being salty 😂😂
@coreyap1
@coreyap1 10 ай бұрын
Owned at one time a Pancho Segura Sweetspot. A Garcia Frame ( think Harold Soloman) with many strings missing. LOVED this frame but eventually it suffered cracks from wear and tear. I wanted another one but they were no longer available. SO sad!!
@indinaut
@indinaut 10 ай бұрын
Fantastic video! Didn't have to bring up the trauma from that match point from the Federer-Djokovic 2019 Wimbledon Final though 😭
@enzopopp4636
@enzopopp4636 5 ай бұрын
dude, this channel is great!!
@zeroelus
@zeroelus 10 ай бұрын
Huh....Not too long ago at the recycling center I noticed some old racquets in the heap. As I'm assuming most of the fans of this channel would do I wandered over towards them to see if there where any hidden gems, the one that caught my eye was a wooden Wilson "Chris Evert" racquet, but I was puzzled by the weird orange stain on the middle of the racquet's (now very broken) strings, it looked part intentional but also, was very sloppy and very damaged so I didn't really go out of my way to inspect it closely. The frame itself didn't look in good shape either so I left it there...but that weird orange stain in the middle seems suspiciously similar to the spaghetti string adhesive and pattern.
@jaaklucas1329
@jaaklucas1329 10 ай бұрын
I started playing tennis in the 80s when wood was being phased out for metal. Ive picked up a few wooden rackets years ago to compare with the rackets of the present. You understand why serve and volley died out with the modern technology in tennis.
@zeroelus
@zeroelus 10 ай бұрын
@@jaaklucas1329 Between racquets and I think it was McEnroe that said something along the lines of courts being better built/maintained and less grass courts mean a far more consistent bounce, so less need to keep the ball in the air and far less risk of the ball skidding/dying on you if you let it bounce. I do want to hit with a good wooden racket just to see how different the game is.
@jaaklucas1329
@jaaklucas1329 10 ай бұрын
Agreed on the grass courts getting better bounces and less skidding. They started using sand and laser levelling to make it more like a modern putting green. Slower and more consistent.A few years ago Misha Zverev won Eastbourne doing pure serve and volley, the grass was old school. Johnny Mac had the Dunlop Maxply wooden raquet mid-career and it was the pinnacle of wooden rackets. Then they came up with steel ala Jimmy Connors. I kept an old wooden raquet around for years to prove to my son that it was the shotmaking that was more important than power. Less errors,etc. We called the power on those old rackets "trampoline power"! I think theres some videos around with modern players using wood...@@zeroelus
@zeroelus
@zeroelus 10 ай бұрын
@@jaaklucas1329 Yeah I think it was Dimitrov and Zverev hitting with some old school racquets? In any case I've seen the video you mention. It's so cool you've been able to play through such an important phase in tennis, so much variety! How do you feel about the last 10 years of racquet evolution? I personally feel that strings and frames have been improving incrementally, but nothing really big that stands out from the initial advent of poly strings and graphite racquets. And if you don't mind me asking, what racquets do you use?
@Nicksonian
@Nicksonian 10 ай бұрын
A $650 racket? The advertisement for the spaghetti racket in 1976 said it was $119.99. That’s $650 in today’s money. How many people today spend that much on a tennis racket?
@otm646
@otm646 9 ай бұрын
It's easy to spend $300 on a production racket today. For a totally custom, innovative, minuscule production run option paying double is not unreasonable.
@deltacharlieecho4732
@deltacharlieecho4732 8 ай бұрын
Don't worry, hybrid stringing with sub 100cm head rackets allowed for players to develop insane spin. In high school I played with prince tricomp 90s while everyone else was playing with Head TI S6 rackets and oversized heads with oversized sweet spots. My entire game was control and spin so I have insane respect for someone that made a racket where the entire point was unpredictable spin and absolute chaos on the other side of the net.
@rushoffman965
@rushoffman965 9 ай бұрын
Sounds like a skill issue
@infinitesimotel
@infinitesimotel 5 ай бұрын
So no actual footage of this thing in action whatsoever?
@bri9498
@bri9498 9 ай бұрын
Honestly I don't care about tennis at all, but I love someone coming up with something new...
@lgeiger
@lgeiger 10 ай бұрын
My father actually beat the TC Grün-Weiß Vilsbiburg in the German Bundesliga many years ago by starting to hit short and slow balls to get the opponent to the net and also to make him miss a lot of shots, because you could not generate any pace on you own with that racket.
@aLesbianStaccato
@aLesbianStaccato 9 ай бұрын
Your videos have an energy akin to those of summoning salt’s. They inspire fascination for a world I’ll never join myself.
@chrisnotyou
@chrisnotyou 9 ай бұрын
I play silent temnis now. Its just like regular tennis, but without the racket.
@kriena4190
@kriena4190 9 ай бұрын
Good one
@Benzinilinguine
@Benzinilinguine 7 ай бұрын
Holy shmoley. I am not kidding, my group in middle school had a project where we had to come up with our own invention, and my group tested exactly this, essentially. This is crazy. Buried memories.
@mikkelnyhuus9173
@mikkelnyhuus9173 6 ай бұрын
I like your sponsor, but it’s not only that. It’s a knowledge of how the opponent usually plays, getting a feel for how they play against opponents similar to yourself and rode repetition against a myriad different play styles. It’s strategy which is based on knowledge, muscle memory and a balanced and honed body with the instincts/feel/zoning in and reaction time to back it up.
@Jo553Nas
@Jo553Nas 10 ай бұрын
Your maps are wrong, the reunification of Germany was only in 1990
@Spaghetter813
@Spaghetter813 9 ай бұрын
It also has the Czech Republic instead of Czechoslovakia
@koborkutya7338
@koborkutya7338 9 ай бұрын
This story is a great demonstration of tennis being first and foremost a snob's pastime. This design was rejected and banned because it was not invented some rich guy of the establishment or a a billionaire equipment maker. And for no other reason.
@Austin101123
@Austin101123 6 ай бұрын
If its good at groundstroke and bad at serve, what if you had a thicker racket with a different string set on each side? Use the Werner side for groundstroke, and the regular side for serves and volleys.
@skiptoacceptancemdarlin
@skiptoacceptancemdarlin 9 ай бұрын
We can’t have tennis being interesting, now can we?
@br0cket
@br0cket 7 ай бұрын
with this racquet the ball played tennis.. no wonder Meuller drank beers between games
@angrjams7683
@angrjams7683 10 ай бұрын
you're not allowed to show the wimbledon passing shot without a trigger warning. my lawyer will be in touch :P
@ryelor123
@ryelor123 9 ай бұрын
So before the ban, you could use a baseball bat?
@alisonarnold4688
@alisonarnold4688 9 ай бұрын
Yes(I think), but good luck making shots in.
@martinrosschou
@martinrosschou 9 ай бұрын
5:00 Biggest mistakes doesn't happen from things you don't know; they happen from what you know for sure.
@creedolala6918
@creedolala6918 6 ай бұрын
First time visitor to the channel, pretty interesting and well edited video. I feel like you could have used some footage of real match shots that show this crazy spin catching players off guard. off I go to search for videos showing what this racquet actually does...
@Humineral
@Humineral 9 ай бұрын
I wonder why certain games attract certain types of people. Tennis, Chess, Rock-Climbing, MMO's, League of Legends etc.
@Coco-hq6ns
@Coco-hq6ns 9 ай бұрын
Less of who they attract and more so the kind of people they keep. Do also keep in mind a lot things have some form of barrier to entry that make it more appealing to different groups.
@yourhighschoolenglishteach8405
@yourhighschoolenglishteach8405 7 ай бұрын
5:00 you gotta love it when the “experts” don’t know what they’re talking about
@janbuyukcelen3778
@janbuyukcelen3778 9 ай бұрын
10:56 we want to make tennis not fun ok then I'll play a fun sport instead
@xaph77
@xaph77 10 ай бұрын
Great video as always! I reckon you should cover the Isner vs Mahut 2010 Wimbledon match. It is very historical and would very great if you’d do a video on it.
@TrailBlazer5280
@TrailBlazer5280 10 ай бұрын
I can understand why they removed it. The racket introduced a high level of randomness to the game which takes away from the skill vs skill aspect of it. No completive sport can have the outcome rely on randomness it destroys the competition
@Gunbudder
@Gunbudder 9 ай бұрын
reminds me of the argument for aluminum bats in MLB lol
@jdoesmath2065
@jdoesmath2065 10 ай бұрын
Very interesting history. Thanks for sharing this. This was a bit before my time. I do remember when one of the Australian Woodies (Woodbridge? Woodford?) using a diagonally strung racket that caused controversy. I also remember when textured stings (Gamma Ruff?) showed up. After one set the balls were shaved clean. I would like to see regulations put in place regarding rackets ... not unlike Major League Baseball requiring wooden bats.
@atrem7942
@atrem7942 10 ай бұрын
Still i think it would be fun to see a solid player use a modern racket and modern strings to recreate that string pattern to see what would happen. Like if you are just as curious as i am to see what would happen because no actual video other than the close up is not shown.
@jaaklucas1329
@jaaklucas1329 10 ай бұрын
Today with the oversized racket, strung with different strings and different tensions between the mains and crosses you can generate massive topspin. Think Rafa. Interestingly, Djoker is one of the few to still use a 95 which I can say from experience has more precision but the sweet spot is smaller so its harder to use...
@CHillTennisEntertainment
@CHillTennisEntertainment 10 ай бұрын
Truly a fantastic video. Great job! 👍
@saddlebags2423
@saddlebags2423 10 ай бұрын
God damnit Cult, you did not have to include a clip from the 2019 Wimbledon final.
@robertl426
@robertl426 10 ай бұрын
Believe it or not, I first learned to play tennis with woood rackets in the mid 90's. They had the shape of modern rackets, but were made of wood. I've no idea what happened to them, I wish I had kept them as a momento. Now that I'm middle aged, I wouldn't mind an old wood racket to hang on the wall.
@nilsoppp
@nilsoppp 10 ай бұрын
Your editing is amazing
@pyropulseIXXI
@pyropulseIXXI 8 ай бұрын
I love two handed backhands. I had a power two handed back hand that shot just over the jet and super quick diagonally
@tsbrownie
@tsbrownie 8 ай бұрын
The best racquet ever made was the Davis Classic II. Not the best for power, but for control and lack of arm/elbow stress, it is still unbeaten.
@sootchh4055
@sootchh4055 10 ай бұрын
My mother used to own a diagonally-strung racket back in the 1980s which was eventually passed on to me in my high school years. I think the manufacturer 's name was Volkl or something. Personally I thought the coolest innovation was the length-adjustable racket by Puma which was used by Boris Becker in his early years.
@PisarencoGh
@PisarencoGh Ай бұрын
in table tennis we have the pimpled rubbers. So, somehow "spaghetti" did survive in table tennis.
@devinedude3690
@devinedude3690 10 ай бұрын
love this story.... bravo!!!!
@Maker0824
@Maker0824 9 ай бұрын
I’ve never watched tennis, but it sounds much more interesting if you could choose your type of racket that would have different advantages and disadvantages and be forced to play around it. Basically what I’m saying to everyone that lost against is: skill issue
@yandrak6134
@yandrak6134 10 ай бұрын
I just love this channel
@CalabusDabus
@CalabusDabus 9 ай бұрын
All I hear is a bunch of crying cause they got beat.
@perc30pablo36
@perc30pablo36 9 ай бұрын
Thats tennis
@2MeterLP
@2MeterLP 9 ай бұрын
It seems to me that making the game less predictable also makes it less fun and less about skill.
@Atlas-nf2gw
@Atlas-nf2gw 8 ай бұрын
​@@2MeterLP It simply shifts the skill focus of the game from the player receiving a hit to the technique of the player hitting the ball due to the increased ball control it offers. The skill factor wasn't removed and thinking it was betrays a lack of insight.
@paulclousier3856
@paulclousier3856 8 ай бұрын
​@Atlas-nf2gw Do you play tennis? I dont want to assume anything.
@rlv360
@rlv360 8 ай бұрын
Hmm, you should try court tennis, real tennis or Jeu de Paume. The balls are the random element!
@Pr3stag3
@Pr3stag3 10 ай бұрын
1:41 holy cow Andy Murray is a time traveler. Tell me that doesn't look like a young Andy Murray the one sat behind the woman.
@Maxim.Teleguz
@Maxim.Teleguz 8 ай бұрын
This gives me a really good idea. I know how to maintain the same pattern no double strings and still generate the same spin. This new racquet will bring this back.
@JMUDoc
@JMUDoc 10 ай бұрын
"I need my racquet strung." "OK, let's... nope - fuck THAT."
@goetzjustwannahavefun
@goetzjustwannahavefun 4 ай бұрын
very interesting video! unbelievable that everybody agreed on what a racket should look like without it being specified in the rules somewhere. One point of critcism, though. That's not what germany looked like back then - at least not the country as market, where Fischer could potentially distribute his rackets.
@robertjones8598
@robertjones8598 2 ай бұрын
Why is there no actual footage of these matches?
@athena1491
@athena1491 6 ай бұрын
We need a WRO Wacky Racket Open, specifically for all these inventions
@edgillis4686
@edgillis4686 9 ай бұрын
In 1977, Guillermo Vilas had his 53 match clay court winning streak snapped when he walked off the court frustrated while playing Ilie Nastase who was using a spaghetti strung racket. Vilas’s clay court winning streak of 53 matches may still be the record till this day. Incredible that it ended with a default. Nastase was extremely gifted and likely one of the few pros of the time who could adapt his strokes to take full advantage of the crazy strings. The spaghetti strings had already been banned from use by the tour, but the ban was not to go into effect until after tournament the Vilas was playing in. Vilas went on the win another 29 straight matches on clay after the default to Nastase - a streak of 82 consecutive clay wins discounting the match against Nastase who was using a banned racket.
@artxiom
@artxiom 9 ай бұрын
Very interesting story and it's funny that such a goofy thing happened in Tennis but it's for sure for the better that it didn't take off: for a competitive sport control and predictability are must haves. Else there is too much randomness, which kills the very idea of fair competition.
@ЗдравићБојан-в2п
@ЗдравићБојан-в2п 8 ай бұрын
Has anyone spotted Andy Murray (70's edition), on 1:41 ?
@ivanbazan8421
@ivanbazan8421 10 ай бұрын
Great video! But you talked a lot about the unpredictable spin that this new racquet produced but you never showed it!
@CULTTENNIS
@CULTTENNIS 10 ай бұрын
Even after weeks of extensive research, it appears no available archival footage of the racket exists online. If anyone has any, please DM me!
@johnsonmcsandwhich6576
@johnsonmcsandwhich6576 6 ай бұрын
But you didn't ask the question: What if all of the new racket technology since was combined into a new spaghetti racket
@kriena4190
@kriena4190 9 ай бұрын
Honestly would've been interesting to see different players wielding their own type of "weapon"
@Christophe_L
@Christophe_L 9 ай бұрын
I had no idea I had an interest in Tennis. Thank you so much!! Also I've watched a few of your previous videos and have to thank you for introducing me to the hilarious self importance and pompousness of Organized Tennis.
@philsburydoboy
@philsburydoboy 2 ай бұрын
The “double hit” thing sounds exactly like 1970s logic
@mozartiano123
@mozartiano123 22 күн бұрын
Fischer and Fishbach was a natural partnership
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